india : healthcare sector report_august 2013

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The Indian healthcare industry has progressed at an impressive pace over the past few years. The private sector has emerged as a vibrant force in the industry, accounting for almost 74 per cent of the country’s total healthcare expenditure. The Indian healthcare revenues stood at US$ 68.4 billion in 2011 and is expected to reach US$ 158.2 billion by 2017. Of the total healthcare revenues in the country, hospitals account for 71 per cent, pharmaceuticals for 13 per cent and medical equipment and supplies for 9 per cent. India offers both a huge patient pool, favourable regulatory environment and cost advantage for conducting clinical trials. The low cost of medical services has resulted in a rise in the country’s medical tourism, attracting patients from across the world. The Government of India has created the National Health Mission (NHM) for providing effective healthcare to both urban and rural population.

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Page 1: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013
Page 2: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013
Page 3: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Impressive growth

prospects

• Indian healthcare sector, one of the fastest growing industry, is expected to advance at a

CAGR of 15 per cent during 2011–17 to reach USD158 billion. There is immense scope

for enhancing healthcare services penetration in India, this presents ample opportunity for

development of the healthcare industry

Strong fundamentals • Rising income levels, ageing population, growing health awareness and changing attitude

towards preventive healthcare is expected to boost healthcare services demand in future

Cost advantage • The low cost of medical services has resulted in a rise in the country’s medical tourism,

attracting patients from across the world. Moreover, India has emerged as a hub for R&D

activities for international players due to its relatively low cost of clinical research

Favourable investment

environment

• Conducive policies for encouraging FDI, tax benefits, favourable government policies

coupled with promising growth prospects have helped the industry attract private equity,

venture capitals and foreign players

Page 4: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

• The engineering sector is delicensed; 100 per cent FDI is allowed in the sector

• Due to policy support, there was cumulative FDI of USD14.0 billion into the sector over April 2000 – February 2012, making up 8.6 per cent of total FDI into the country in that period

Growing demand

Source: KPMG, Hospital Market – India by Research on India, Frost & Sullivan, LSI Financial Services, Aranca Research

Notes: NRHM – National Rural Health Mission, R&D – Research and Development, CAGR - Compound Annual Growth Rate, USD – US Dollar

Strong demand

• Healthcare revenue in India is set to reach USD158 billion by 2017; expenditure is likely to expand at a CAGR of 15 per cent over 2012–17

• Rising incomes, greater health awareness, lifestyle diseases and increasing access to insurance will contribute to growth

Attractive opportunities

• Investment in healthcare infrastructure is set to rise, benefiting both ‘hard’ (hospitals) and ‘soft’ (R&D, education) infrastructure

• Medical tourism is emerging as one of the most lucrative investment areas in the country

Policy support

• The government aims to develop India as a global healthcare hub

• Policy support in the form of reduced excise and customs duty, and exemption in service tax

• Initiatives like NRHM would boost healthcare in rural areas

Quality and affordability

• Availability of a large pool of well-trained medical professionals in the country

• India has an advantage over its peers in the West and Asia in terms of cost of high-quality medical services offered

2011

Market

value:

USD68.4

billion

2017F

Market

value:

USD158.2

billion

Advantage

India

Page 5: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Hospital Market – India by Research on India, Aranca Research

Healthcare

Hospitals Private Hospitals – It includes nursing homes, and mid-tier and top-tier private hospitals

Pharmaceutical

Diagnostics

Medical Equipment and

Supplies

Medical Insurance

Government Hospitals – It includes healthcare centres, district hospitals and general hospitals

It includes manufacture, extraction, processing, purification and packaging of chemical materials for use as medications for humans or animals

It comprises businesses and laboratories that offer analytical or diagnostic services, including body fluid analysis

It includes establishments primarily manufacturing medical equipment and supplies, e.g. surgical, dental, orthopaedic, ophthalmologic, laboratory instruments, etc

It includes health insurance and medical reimbursement facility, covering an individual’s hospitalisation expenses incurred due to sickness

Page 6: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Healthcare sector growth trend (USD billion)

Source: Frost & Sullivan, LSI Financial Services, Aranca Research

Healthcare sector has progressed at an impressive pace

over the past few years; during 2008–17, the market is

expected to record a CAGR of 15.0 per cent

By 2017, the total industry size is expected to touch

USD158.2 billion

45.0 51.7

59.5 68.4

78.6

158.2

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012E 2017E

CAGR: 15.0%

Page 7: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Market break-up by revenues 2012E

Source: Hospital Market – India by Research on India,

Aranca Research

Notes: 2012E – Estimates for 2012

Of total healthcare revenues in the country–

Hospitals account for 71 per cent

Pharmaceuticals for 13 per cent

Medical equipment and supplies for 9 per cent

71%

13% 9%

4% 3%

Hospitals

Pharmaceutical

Medical Equipment &Supplies

Medical Insurance

Diagnostics

Page 8: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Shares in healthcare spending in India, 2005

Source: Grant Thornton, LSI Financial Services, Aranca Research

The private sector has emerged as a vibrant force in India’s healthcare industry, lending it both national and international

repute

Private sector’s share in healthcare delivery is expected to increase from 66 per cent in 2005 to 81 per cent by

2015

Private sector’s share in hospitals and hospital beds is estimated at 74 per cent and 40 per cent, respectively

Shares in healthcare spending in India, 2015

34%

26%

14%

26%

Governmenthospital

Top tier

Mid tier

Nursing home

19%

40%

11%

30%

Governmenthospital

Top tier

Mid tier

Nursing home

Page 9: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Per-capita healthcare expenditure (USD)

Source: BMI Report, Aranca Research

Notes: E - Estimates; 2015E - Estimates for 2015 (by BMI)

Per capita healthcare expenditure increased at a CAGR of

10.3 per cent during 2008–11 to USD57.9; the figure is set

to touch USD88.7 by 2015

This is due to rising incomes, easier access to high-quality

healthcare facilities and greater awareness of personal

health and hygiene

Greater penetration of health insurance aided the rise in

healthcare spending, a trend likely to intensify in the coming

decade

43.1

44.3 53.2

57.9 61.4

88.7

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012E 2015E

CAGR: 10.3%

Page 10: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Company websites, Fortis Red Herring Prospectus, Aranca Research

Note: * No of beds include owned subsidiaries, joint ventures and affiliations

Company No of beds* Presence

Apollo Hospitals

Enterprise Ltd 8,276

Chennai, Madurai, Hyderabad, Karur, Karim Nagar, Mysore,

Visakhapatnam, Bilaspur, Aragonda, Kakinada, Bengaluru, Delhi,

Noida, Kolkata, Ahmedabad, Mauritius, Pune, Raichur, Ranipet,

Ranchi, Ludhiana, Indore, Bhubaneswar, Dhaka

Aravind Eye

Hospitals 3,649

Theni, Tirunelveli, Coimbatore, Puducherry, Madurai, Amethi,

Kolkata

CARE Hospitals 1,912 Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Nagpur, Raipur, Bhubaneswar, Surat,

Pune, Visakhapatnam

Fortis Healthcare Ltd 12,000 Mumbai, Bengaluru, Kolkata, Mohali, Noida, Delhi, Amritsar,

Raipur, Jaipur, Chennai, Kota

Max Hospitals 1,973 Delhi, NCR, Punjab, Uttarakhand

Manipal Group of

Hospitals 4,900

Udupi, Bengaluru, Manipal, Attavar, Mangalore, Goa, Tumkur,

Vijaywada, Kasaragod, Visakhapatnam

Page 11: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Shift from

communicable to

lifestyle diseases

• With increasing urbanisation and problems related to modern-day living in urban settings,

currently, about 50 per cent of spending on in-patient beds is for lifestyle diseases; this

has increased the demand for specialised care

Expansion to tier-II and

tier-III cities

• There is substantial demand for high-quality and speciality healthcare services in tier-II

and tier-III cities

• To encourage the private sector to establish hospitals in these cities, the government has

relaxed the taxes on these hospitals for the first five years

Management contracts • Many healthcare players such as Fortis and Manipal Group are entering management

contracts to provide an additional revenue stream to hospitals

Source: IRDA, CII, Grant Thornton, Gartner, Technopak, Aranca Research

Note: PPP is Public – Private Partnerships; GOI is Government of India; ICT is Information and Communications Technology;

Management Contracts - An arrangement under which operational control of an enterprise is given to a separate entity for a fee

Emergence of

telemedicine

• Telemedicine is a fast-emerging sector in India; many major hospitals (Apollo, AIIMS,

Narayana Hrudayalaya) have adopted telemedicine services and entered into a number of

PPPs

• In 2012, the telemedicine market in India was valued at USD7.5 million, and is expected to

rise at a CAGR of 20 per cent, to USD18.7 million by 2017

• Telemedicine can bridge the rural-urban divide in terms of medical facilities, extending

low-cost consultation and diagnosis facilities to the remotest of areas via high-speed

internet and telecommunication

Page 12: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Increasing penetration

of health insurance

• Health insurance is gaining momentum in India; gross healthcare insurance premium is

expanding at a CAGR of 39 per cent over FY06–10

• This trend is likely to continue, benefitting the country’s healthcare industry

Mobile-based health

delivery

• Strong mobile technology infrastructure and launch of 4G is expected to drive mobile

health initiatives in the country

• Currently, there are over 20 mhealth initiatives in the country for spreading awareness

about family planning and other ailments

• Mobile health industry in India is expected to reach USD0.6 billion by 2017

Source: IRDA, CII, Grant Thornton, Gartner, Technopak, PwC, Aranca Research

Note: PPP is Public – Private Partnerships; GOI is Government of India; ICT is Information and Communications Technology;

Management Contracts - An arrangement under which operational control of an enterprise is given to a separate entity for a fee

Technological initiatives

• To standardise the quality of service delivery, control cost and enhance patient

engagement, healthcare providers are focussing on the technological aspect of healthcare

delivery

• Digital Health Knowledge Resources, Electronic Medical Record, Mobile Healthcare,

Electronic Health Record, Hospital Information System and PRACTO are some of the

technologies gaining wide acceptance in the sector

• Healthcare sector’s spending on IT products and services is expected to rise from USD53

billion in 2012 to USD57 billion in 2013

Page 13: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Health Ministry, Aranca Research

Notes: FDI – Foreign Direct Investment, M&A - Mergers & Acquisitions

NRHM - National Rural Health Mission

Strong

government

support

Rising incomes and affordability

Growing elderly population,

changing disease patterns

Rise in medical

tourism

Policy support

NRHM allocated USD10 billion for

healthcare facilities

Increasing investments

Rising FDI

Lucrative M&A opportunities

Inviting Resulting in

Growing demand

Encouraging

policies for FDI and the private sector

Reduction in customs duty and other taxes

on life-saving equipment

Rising FDI and private sector investments

Foreign players setting R&D centres and

hospitals Better awareness

of wellness,

preventive care

and diagnosis

Page 14: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Trends in per capita income in India (USD)

Source: IMF, World Bank Data, Aranca Research

Notes: E – Estimates; F – Forecasts

Rising incomes mean a steady growth in the ability to

access healthcare and related services

Per capita income is expected to increase at a

CAGR of 5.7 per cent over 2012–18

Per capita expenditure on healthcare in India in

2011 was USD58

Changing demographics has also contributed to greater

healthcare spending; this is likely to continue with the size

of the elderly population set to rise from the current 96

million to about 168 million by 2026

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013F 2015F 2017F

Per Capita income, USD, LHS Annual growth rate, RHS

Page 15: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Number of hospitalised cases (million)

Source: Apollo Investor Presentation August 2012,

Aranca Research

Increased incidences of lifestyle diseases such as heart

disease, obesity and diabetes have contributed to rising

healthcare spending by individuals

Lifestyle diseases are expected to account for 48 per

cent of the in-patient revenue in 2013

Growing health awareness and precautionary treatments

coupled with improved diagnostics are resulting in an

increase in hospitalisation

2.9

2.0

1.2

5.2

3.1

2.3

8.3

4.2

3.4

Cardiac Oncology Diabetes

2008 2013F 2018F

Page 16: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Indian health insurance market size (USD million)

Source: IRDA, Towers Watson Aranca Research

Note: CAGR – Compounded Annual Growth Rate

The health insurance industry expanded at a CAGR of 33.0

per cent in FY06–12; the fast pace of growth is expected to

continue in the coming years

The share of population having medical insurance is likely

to rise to 20 per cent by 2015 from the present 2 per cent

With increasing number of companies offering insurance

cover to their employees, the healthcare insurance business

in India is set to expand further 502

709

1,274

1,443

1,752

2,459

2,774

FY06 FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12

CAGR: 33.0%

Page 17: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Cost of surgeries in different countries (USD)

Source: Ministry of Health, RNCOS, KPMG, LSI Financial Services,

Apollo Investor Presentation, August 2012 Aranca Research

Presence of world-class hospitals and skilled medical

professionals has strengthened India’s position as a

preferred destination for medical tourism

The growth in the sector is underscored by the cost

advantage that India provides to patients from developed

countries. Notably, India also attracts medical tourists from

developing nations due to lack of advanced medical

facilities in many of these countries

Medical tourism market is expected to expand at a CAGR of

27 per cent to reach USD3.9 billion in 2014 from USD1.9

billion in 2011

Inflow of medical tourists is expected to cross 320 million by

2015 compared to 85 million in 2012

Yoga, meditation, ayurveda, allopathy and other traditional

methods of treatment are major service offerings that attract

medical tourists from European nations and the Middle East

to India

-

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

250,000

300,000

Heart surgery Bone marrowtransplant

Liver transplant Kneereplacement

US UK Thailand Singapore India

Page 18: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Market size • The traditional (ayurvedic) medical care market in India was valued at about USD1.4

billion in 2010, and this is expected to rise at a CAGR of 20 per cent over 2011–15

Services offered

• Ayurvedic medicines offer traditional Indian health remedies based on natural and herbal

ingredients

• The sector has broadened its offerings and now includes services on diet and nutrition,

yoga, herbal medicine, humour therapy and spa

Source: Ministry of Health, RNCOS, KPMG, Aranca Research

Leading brands and

players

• Vicks VapoRub, Amrutanjan Balm, Zandu Balm, Moov Pain Cream and Halls Lozenges

are among the leading ayurvedic brands in India

• Many big players such as Apollo, VLCC and Manipal Group are also setting up wellness

centres across India, with traditional healthcare remedies as the focus of their offerings

Notable trends

• The traditional medical sector is developing Traditional Knowledge Digital Library to

prevent companies from claiming patents on such remedies

• There is growing interest from numerous private equity firms in the traditional healthcare

sector in India

Page 19: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Share of private sector in total health expenditure,

2009

Source: WHO World Health Statistics 2012, Aranca Research

Rising incomes have led to greater affordability for superior

quality healthcare facilities in the private sector

In India, private healthcare accounts for almost 74 per cent

of the country’s total healthcare expenditure

Private players have been constantly innovative in their

efforts to provide better healthcare services to a wider

customer base

Some are trying to combine traditional healthcare

practices with conventional systems to create new

avenues for their businesses

36.6%

47.5% 56.4%

73.8%

Russia China Brazil India

Page 20: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Market size of private hospitals (USD billion)

Source: WHO Statistical Information System, Yes Bank, Aranca Research

Note: E-estimates

The hospital market in India is estimated at USD54.7 billion

at end-of 2012, with the private sector accounting for 82 per

cent

Over 2009–12, the market size of private hospitals is

estimated to have increased at a CAGR of 26.9 per cent

Increase in number of hospitals in Tier-II and Tier-III cities

has fuelled the growth of private sector

22.0

29.9

35.4

45.0

2009 2010E 2011E 2012E

CAGR: 26.9%

Page 21: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Proposed budget allocation for Departments of Ministry of

Health and Family Welfare under 12th Plan (USD billion)

Source: Planning Commission, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Aranca Research

Notes: AYUSH - Department of Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy

The Planning Commission has allocated USD55 billion under the 12th Five-Year Plan to the Ministry of Health and Family

Welfare, which is about three times the actual expenditure under the 11th Five-Year Plan

The share of healthcare in total plan allocation is set to rise to 2.5 per cent of GDP in the 12th Plan from 0.9 per cent in

the 11th Plan

The 12th plan focusses on providing universal healthcare, strengthening healthcare infrastructure, promoting R&D and

enacting strong regulations for the healthcare sector

Budget allocation for Departments of Ministry of Health

and Family Welfare under 11th Plan (USD billion)

49.4

1.8

1.8 2.1

Department ofHealth and FamilyWelfare

AYUSH

Department ofHealth Research

Aids Control18.4

0.7 0.4

0.3 Department ofHealth and FamilyWelfare

AYUSH

Department ofHealth Research

Aids Control

Page 22: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Encouraging the private

sector

• The benefit of section 10 (23 G) of the IT Act has been extended to financial institutions

that provide long-term capital to hospitals with 100 beds or more

• Government is encouraging the PPP model to improve availability of healthcare services

and provide healthcare financing

Encouraging

investments in rural

areas

• The benefit of section 80-IB has been extended to new hospitals with 100 beds or more

that are set up in rural areas; such hospitals are entitled to 100 per cent deduction on

profits for five years

Source: Union Budget FY13,Health Ministry, Aranca Research

Tax incentives • Customs duty on life-saving equipment has been reduced to 5 per cent from 25 per cent

and exempted from countervailing duty

• Import duty on medical equipment has been reduced to 7.5 per cent

Incentives in the

medical travel industry • Incentives and tax holidays are being offered to hospitals and dispensaries providing

health travel facilities

Page 23: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Union Budget FY14

• Ministry of Health and Family Welfare allocated USD6.9 billion, an increase of 21 per cent

from FY13

• Creation of new National Health Mission (NHM) for providing effective healthcare to both

urban and rural population, with emphasis on states with weak health infrastructure and

indicators

• NHM extended to encompass Ayurveda, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy to strengthen

traditional medical forms

• Scope of Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) enhanced to include rickshaw pullers,

taxi drivers, sanitation workers, rag pickers and mine workers

• Fund allocation to provide accessible and affordable services to elderly under National

Programme for the Health Care of Elderly

• Allocation of USD875.4 million for improving medical education, training and research

Source: Union Budget FY14, Aranca Research

Page 24: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

FDI inflows (Apr 2000 – Mar 2013) into the

healthcare sector

Source: Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion, Aranca Research

Notes: FDI – Foreign Direct Investment

100 per cent FDI is permitted for all health-related services

under the automatic route

Demand growth, cost advantages and policy support have

been instrumental in attracting FDI

During April 2000 – March 2013, FDI inflows for drugs and

pharmaceuticals stood at USD10.3 billion

Inflows into hospitals and diagnostic centres, and medical

appliances stood at USD1.6 billion and USD 0.6 billion,

respectively, during the same period -1.0%

0.0%

1.0%

2.0%

3.0%

4.0%

5.0%

6.0%

0

2,000

4,000

6,000

8,000

10,000

12,000

Drug &Pharmasuticals

Hospital &diagnostic Centres

Medical & SurgicalAppliances

US

D M

illio

n

Cumulative FDI flows (USD million) Share of total FDI inflows (%) - right axis

Page 25: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Healthcare Outlook “A Quarterly Report By Technopak” Feb 2007, Aranca Research

India’s primary comparative advantage lies in its–

Large pool of well-trained medical professionals in the country

Cost advantage compared to peers in Asia and Western countries

Cost of surgery in India is one-tenth of that in the US or Western Europe

Increased success rate of Indian companies in getting Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) approvals

The country offers vast opportunities in R&D as well as medical tourism

Opportunities for Investments in Healthcare

Diagnostic & Pathology

Services

High cost differential in India allows for outsourcing of pathology and laboratory tests by foreign

hospital chains

Clinical Trials India offers both a huge patient pool, favourable regulatory environment and cost advantage for

conducting clinical trials

Health Insurance Less than 15 per cent of the Indian population is covered by any kind of health insurance; this

provides significant opportunity to a new player in the health insurance market

Telemedicine Provides access to better quality healthcare in rural areas

Page 26: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Grant Thornton Dealtracker, 2012, Q1 2013, Aranca Research

Notes: M&A – Mergers and Acquisitions; * Jan-Mar

Pharma, healthcare and biotech have witnessed significant increases in M&A activities over the years; over the last three

years, pharmaceuticals segment has accounted for more than 70 per cent of M&A deals

In 2012, the M&A deal value in healthcare stood at USD2.7 billion, an increase of more than 30 per cent compared to those

in 2011

14 domestic M&A transactions concluded in 2012, with a total value of USD198 million

28 cross-border transactions accounted for majority of M&A deal value in healthcare, at USD2.4 billion

In 1Q 2013*, pharma, healthcare and biotech emerged as top sectors, accounting for 41per cent of the M&A deal value

Indian Partner Foreign Players Type of Business Stake (%) Year

Agila Specialities Pvt Ltd Mylan, Inc. Pharma, healthcare and biotech 100.0 2013

Orchid Chemical and

Pharmaceuticals Hospira, Inc Pharma, healthcare and biotech -- 2012

Dental Corporation

Holdings Ltd Bupa Care Services Ltd Pharma, healthcare and biotech -- 2012

Piramal Healthcare Ltd Decision Resources Group Healthcare data -- 2012

Strides Acrolab Watson Pharma Pharmaceutical -- 2012

Page 27: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Grant Thornton Dealtracker, 2012, Q1 2013, Aranca Research

Notes: PE – Private Equity; * Jan-Mar

Healthcare sector in India is attracting a number of PE investors; of total PE deals in India, healthcare accounted for 70 per

cent of the deals and 65 per cent of the deal value

About 38 PE deals (USD856 million) were concluded in the healthcare sector in 2012, increasing from 18 and 23 deals in

2011 and 2010, respectively

Diagnostic centres, multi-speciality hospitals and chain of single-speciality hospitals attracted the majority of PE investments

in 2012

In 1Q 2013*, pharma, healthcare and biotech emerged as top sectors, accounting for 22 per cent of the PE deal value

Investee Investor Type of business Stake (%) Year

Apollo Hospital Enterprise Oppenheimer Fund Pharma, healthcare and biotech -- 2013

CARE Hospital Advent International

Corporation Hospital -- 2012

DM Healthcare Olympus Capital Hospital -- 2012

Vasan Healthcare GIC Hospital -- 2012

Intas Pharmaceuticals Ltd Chrys Capital Pharma, healthcare and biotech 3.70 2012

Page 28: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Company website, Company Reports, Aranca Research. Note: JV – Joint Venture; NABH - National Accreditation Board for Hospitals &

Healthcare; NABL - National Accreditation Board for Testing & Calibration Laboratories, ISO – International Organisation for Standardisation

2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013

Organic growth

through expansion

of hospital network

Network of highly

qualified doctors,

nurses and medical

personnel

2000

Established first

hospital Max

Medcenter

Strengthened

capabilities to provide

primary, secondary &

tertiary/quaternary care

FY12

USD172 million

turnover

JV with Life

Healthcare, South

Africa, extending

global reach

Further expansion

in North India

2012

Over 1,973 beds and

team of 1,800 doctors;

2,400 nurses & 900

other trained

personnel

NABL accredited

NABH certified

Received DL Shah

National Award on

‘Economics of Quality’

Award for

‘Excellence in

Healthcare delivery’

ISO 9001:2000 &

ISO 14001: 2004

certified

Page 29: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Company website, Company Reports, Aranca Research

Note: IFC - International Finance Corporation, NABH - National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare; R&D - Research & Development

1998 1999 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013

Expansion of

hospital network

in Bengaluru and

Chennai

Acquisition of

Tamilnad Hospital in

2007 for transforming

it to Global Health City

1998

First hospital

opened in

Hyderabad

Operational

excellence,

inclusion of more

service offerings

aided growth

2010

Global Health City

received NABH

accreditation

Proposed IFC

investment to

enhance bed capacity

to 1,800 by FY2016

2013

Current capacity

of about 2,173

beds First hospital to carry out

intravascular surgery

First hospital to perform

radial procedures

First hospital to be

recognised for R&D by

Govt. of India

Leading multi-organ

transplant centre

Completed highest radial

procedures in India

2013 and beyond:

Expansion in

metropolitan and

Tier I & II cities

Page 30: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Research on India, Aranca Research

1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2002 2008 2012

Network of 29

hospitals, including

12 satellite with

capacity of 3,280

beds

Started

Fortis International

Institute of Medical

Sciences, a major

educational institution

with international

standards

2013

73 healthcare

facilities and

around

12,000 beds

Completed

acquisition of

Wockhardt Hospitals

Ltd, adding 10 more

hospitals

Fortis is coming up

with two multi-

speciality hospitals

and a medical

college for 500

students

Plans to add 4,300

new beds in next

four years

Completed

acquisition of ~75 per

cent stake in SRL

Current network

Higher profitability

Acquisitions

Diversification

Hospital expansion

Page 31: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Source: Research on India, Aranca Research;

Note: JV – Joint Venture

1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2002 2008 2012

Launched Oman’s first

private telemedicine

centre at its Muscat

Hospital in 2007

Started its first

children’s hospital

in Chennai with 80

bed capacity

First telemedicine

centre

Expansion into child

care

Hospital expansion

Joint venture

Enhanced investment

Apollo plans to start a new

Stemcyte and Cord blood

Collection Centre through a

JV with Cadilla

Pharmaceutical, Stemcyte

India Therapeutics Ltd and

Stemcyte USA

Apollo plans to invest

~USD400 million to

add another 2,685

beds by 2015

2013

8,420 beds

APHEL is starting a

290-bed super-

speciality hospital in

Bhubaneswar

1983

150 beds

Added robotic

surgery

capabilities in

4Q FY13

Page 32: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Notes: Industry Estimates

Healthcare infrastructure

• Additional 1.8 million beds

needed for India to achieve

the target of 2 beds per

1,000 people

by 2025

• Additional 1.54 million

doctors required to meet

the growing demand for

healthcare

• Investment of USD86 billion

required to achieve these

targets

Research

• Contract research is a fast

growing segment in the

Indian healthcare industry

• Cost of developing new

drug is as low as 60 per

cent of the testing cost in

the US

• About 60 per cent of global

clinical trials is outsourced

to developing countries

Medical tourism

• The Indian medical tourism

industry is poised to grow

at 30 per cent annually into

a USD2 billion business by

end-2012

• Cost of surgery in India is

nearly one-tenth of the cost

in developed countries

Page 33: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Healthcare spending as a percentage of

GDP (2009)

Source: WHO World Health Statistics 2012, E&Y, LSI Financial Services,

Aranca Research

Huge scope for enhancing healthcare services considering

that healthcare spending as a percentage of GDP

Rural India, which accounts for over 70 per cent of

population and is set to emerge as a potential demand

source

Only 3 per cent of specialist physicians cater to rural

demand

Vast opportunities for investment in healthcare infrastructure

in both urban and rural India

About 1.8 million beds required by the end of 2025

Additional 1.54 million doctors and 2.4 million nurses

required to meet the growing demand

9.4%

4.6%

World India

Health infrastructure per 10,000 individual (2009)

Physicians Nurses and

midwifery personnel

Hospital

beds

India 6.5 10.0 9.0

World

median 14.5 28.1 30.0

Page 34: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Health insurance premium collection

(USD billion)

Source: Hospital Market India – By Research on India, LSI Financial Services, Aranca Research

Less than 15 per cent of the Indian population is covered

through health insurance

Increasing healthcare cost and burden of new diseases

along with low government funding is raising demand for

health insurance coverage

Many companies offer health insurance coverage to

employees, driving market penetration of insurance players

The share of population having medical insurance is likely

to rise to 20 per cent by 2015 from the present 2 per cent

1.1

1.45

3.0

2007-08 2008-09 2011-12E

With increasing demand for affordable and quality healthcare, penetration of health insurance is poised to grow

exponentially in the coming years

Medical insurance is estimated to become a USD3-billion industry by the end of 2012

Health insurance premiums are expected to increase at a CAGR of 30 per cent during 2012–14

CAGR: 27.0%

Page 35: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Indian Medical Association

I.M.A. House

Indraprastha Marg,

New Delhi – 110 002, India

Telephone: 91112337 0009, 2337 8819

Fax: 91112337 9470, 2337 9178

Website: www.ima-india.org

E-mail: [email protected]

The Federation of Obstetric and Gynaecological Societies of India

Model Residency, 605,

Bapurao Jagtap Marg,

Jacob Circle, Mahalaxmi East,

Mumbai – 400 011, India

Fax: 23021383

Website: www.fogsi.org

E-mail: [email protected]

Page 36: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

CAGR: Compound Annual Growth Rate

EPA: Externally Aided Projects

FDI: Foreign Direct Investment

FY: Indian financial year (April to March)

So FY10 implies April 2009 to March 2010

GOI: Government of India

ICT: Information and Communications Technology

IMF: International Monetary Fund

INR: Indian Rupee

M&A: Mergers and Acquisitions

NHRM: National Rural Health Mission

PPP: Public Private Partnerships

Page 37: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

R&D: Research and Development

USD: US dollar

WHO: World Health Statistics

Where applicable, numbers have been rounded off to the nearest whole number

Page 38: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

Year INR equivalent of one USD

2004-05 44.95

2005-06 44.28

2006-07 45.28

2007-08 40.24

2008-09 45.91

2009-10 47.41

2010-11 45.57

2011-12 47.94

2012-13 54.31

Exchange Rates (Fiscal Year)

Year INR equivalent of one USD

2005 45.55

2006 44.34

2007 39.45

2008 49.21

2009 46.76

2010 45.32

2011 45.64

2012 54.69

2013 54.45

Exchange Rates (Calendar Year)

Average for the year

Page 39: India : Healthcare Sector Report_August 2013

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